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ארבעה חודשים בלי רכבת: הקורונה החזירה את התחבורה הציבורית לשנות ה-90
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Mar. 3, 2021
An appeals committee has rejected a petition against the Tel Aviv Municipality’s plan to protect a coastal cliff in danger of future collapse by destroying a section of its top. The committee, part of the National Planning and Building Council, ruled that the decision to protect the cliff is reasonable, and that it balances the need to prevent a danger of collapse and the need to protect the cliff for ecological reasons.
The petition was submitted by the Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel after the National Protection of the Coastal Environment Committee approved the plan five months ago to address a coastal cliff in north Tel Aviv whose slope was in danger of collapse. The cliff sits in an area designated to become a park. The plan was approved after the municipality conducted tests to examine the stability of the cliff and the need to protect it from future collapse.
ה-waze של המטיילים: אפליקציה חדשה תעדכן אתכם איפה עמוס ואם נקי או מלוכלך
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Israelis rally to clean tar spill and avert future crises
Israel’s largest environmental disaster brings out thousands of volunteers to clean beaches and brings renewed call for prevention and monitoring.
Photo of volunteers cleaning tar from Ga ’ash Beach by Dafna Ben Nun Photography
Why did 1,200 tons of sticky tar begin washing up on Israel’s Mediterranean beaches on the stormy day of February 17? The answer is not yet clear.
Experts say that no matter what caused Israel’s worst environmental disaster, it should have been contained as much as possible before contaminating 160 kilometers (nearly 100 miles) of Israel’s 190-kilometer seashore. They agree that Israel must formulate better ways of preventing, detecting and clearing oil spills.